Introduction

NOTE: The data and findings below are drafts subject to change and some pieces are still in the QA process.

RACE COUNTS provides a 3D view of racial equity:
PERFORMANCE: How well people are doing. The higher the circle, the better the performance.
DISPARITY: How racial groups compare to one another. The further right the circle, the greater the differences by race.
IMPACT: The total population. The bigger the circle, the larger the population.


purple counties: Gains at Risk;
Orange counties: Prosperity for the Few;
Yellow counties: Struggling to Prosper;
Red counties: Stuck and Unequal.

Race/Ethnicity Notes


1) “Other” race includes those who identify with a race outside of the specifically named categories, such as Asian, White, etc.
2) Race labels for bar charts: The “nh_” prefix signifies that a group is non-Latinx (excludes Latinx).
3) The “twoormor” group represents those who identify as Two or More Races.

Indicators

Health Care Access Index - UPDATED

  • Marin County has the best overall Health Care access but also ranks as the sixth most disparate county in the state.
  • Looking across indicators, Black Californians fare worse than other groups in 3 out of the 6 indicators for Health Care Access.
  • All eight of the counties in the San Joaquin Valley Region have lower overall performance when it comes to health care access. They are all in the red or yellow quadrants.
  • All nine Bay Area counties have above average rates of overall health care access, with six out of the nine counties also demonstrating low rates of racial disparity.

Got Help - UPDATED

Scatterplot

  • More populous counties tend to display fairly average measures of both racial disparity and performance for mental health/substance abuse help relative to the rest of the counties in California. None of the top eight most populous counties in the state score outside a +/-1 point threshold on either index.
  • Marin County has the best overall rate for this indicator, but is the second most disparate county in the state. White residents of Marin County are over 2 times more likely to get help for mental health and substance abuse issues than Asian residents.
  • Despite have the least racial disparities of any county, Imperial County displays the worst measures of performance in the state by a significant margin. The overall rate of mental health/substance abuse help in the county is more than 13 percentage points lower than the statewide average.

State Barchart

  • Non-Latinx Whites are nearly 1.4 times more likely to get help for Mental/Emotional or Alchohol/Drug Issues than Non-Latinx Asians.
  • Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islanders, Non-Latinx Black, Latinx Californians, and Non-Latinx Asians all have rates below the state average.

County Barchart

Lack of Health Insurance - UPDATED

Scatterplot

  • Similar to the mental health/substance abuse help indicator, Marin County has the third highest overall rate of health insurance, but the second highest racial disparity. Latinx residents of the county are 7x more likely to be uninsured rate than White residents.
  • Sierra County has the highest disparity and third-worst performance of any county in the state. Over half of its Latinx population is uninsured – a rate more than 10x higher than its white population.
  • Los Angeles County is one of the worst performing counties in the state in terms of health insurance rates among its population. 9% of all its residents are uninsured, including 13.2% of its Latinx residents.

State Barchart

  • White residents are about 2 times less likely to be uninsured than the average Californian.
  • Latinx and American Indian/Alaska Native Californians are about 3 times more likely to be uninsured than White residents.
  • Californians who identify with a racial group under the category of “other” are the most likely to be uninsured. Although it is difficult to know what types of individuals are identifying in this group, it likely includes many who are Latinx (as “Other Race” includes Latinx for this indicator) and those with origins in the Middle East and North Africa, among others.

County Barchart

Life Expectancy - UPDATED

Scatterplot

  • Five of the six counties in Southern California have greater than average racial disparities in life expectancy.
  • Every county in the San Joaquin Valley has below average life expectancy rates.
  • Less populous, less urban counties tend to have fewer racial disparities in life expectancy. Of the 15 least disparate counties in this measure, none of them are classified as urban and only one is among the top ten most populous counties in the state.
  • The state’s most populous, more urban counties tend to exhibit greater racial disparities in life expectancy. San Francisco, San Bernardino, Santa Clara, Los Angeles, San Diego, and Alameda counties are all among the top 20 for disparity levels in this metric.

State Barchart

  • Asians have the highest life expectancy, followed by non-Latinx White Californians. Non-Latinx Blacks have the lowest life expectancy rate in the state, six years lower than the average statewide rate.

County Barchart

Low Birthweight - UPDATED

Scatterplot

  • There is no data for 17 of the 20 counties in the Northern/Sierra region for this measure.
  • There is also a moderately strong, negative correlation between population and performance. Higher population counties tend to experience higher rates of infants with low birthweight. The notable exception is Orange County, which is the third most populous county in the state and is firmly in the purple quadrant (higher performance, lower disparity).
  • San Francisco County and Kings County exhibit by far the largest racial disparities in rates of low birthweight, with Black birth outcomes notably on the wrong end of these disparities. In SF and Kings respectively, Black infants are about 3x and 2x more likely to be underweight than white infants.
  • The three counties with the lowest disparity (Imperial, Humboldt, and Napa) do not have data for Black births. Given the stark disparities in Black birth outcomes, this is at least one reason why disparity is so low in those counties.

State Barchart

  • Black babies have the significantly highest likelihood of having low birthweight of any racial group in California. They are 50% more likely than the group with the next highest rate (American Indians and Alaska Natives), and more than 2x more likely than the group with the lowest rate (white Californians).

County Barchart

Usual Source of Care - UPDATED

Scatterplot

  • All nine Bay Area counties have above average usual source of care rates among their populations and six counties are in the purple Quadrant (Lower Disparity, Higher Performance).
  • Counties with larger populations tend to have lower levels of racial disparity in their usual source of care rates, with none of the 16 counties with 500,000 or more residents appearing in the higher disparity quadrants (Orange and Red).

State Barchart

  • Latinx, Pacific Islander, AIAN, and Asian Californians are less likely to have a usual source of care than the average Californian.
  • Latinx Californians are over nine percentage points less likely to have a usual source of care than White Californians.

County Barchart

Preventable Hospitalizations

Scatterplot

  • The four highest levels of racial disparity in the state, in Imperial, Amador, Lassen, and Mariposa counties, all represent extremely values compared to the rest of the state. In the 2nd-4th highest counties, their small population sizes (>40,000) could help inflate these measures.
  • In Imperial County, by far the most racially disparate county in this measure, white residents have by far the worst outcomes in preventable hospitalizations. They are hospitalized at around 5x the rate of Asian residents and nearly twice the rate of Black and Latinx residents in the county.
  • In many counties, some of the highest rates are for Other race, local knowledge will be needed to better understand who makes up this group in each county.

State Barchart

  • The Black preventable hospitalization rate is nearly 5 times higher than that of the group with the lowest rate, and 2.5 times higher than even the state average.
  • The preventable hospitalization rate for white Californians is about 10% higher than the overall state average and more than 2x higher than the racial group with the lowest rate. This is the only health metric in which white residents experience worse outcomes than the state average.

County Barchart